National Anti-Slavery Standard.
VOL. XXL. NEW YORK, SATURDAY, JUNE 9, 1860, WHOLE NO. 1044.
i i-Slavert’ Standay loquently for old Brown, and clearly showing a|he must do with hi ~ these not ble (ae ° OF ABOLITIO. "ROCITY.
SM atipinteR te lau Sandner asineea oe ery cers eee aaa etme mnie |, SUAAX OF An0zITION A7doorr
a = = her daughter: The above letter was copied at the South some From Toe Mesopbla Appeal of May 21
TED WEEKLY, ON SATURDAY, Furthermore, Col. Lee, upon removing from the | months since the p g Janes TH. Sw U
parish in which he resided at the time Miss Child was | against its author. Southern Christians relic t ¢, has just retui
taken with this affeetion of the- sping, upon learning | in his duress, and he is now in this eity seeking mate-| Ohio, whither he went for, the
. y py . war, that the lady could x he cd from her bed,| rial sympathy for his—what 7 Tribune aptly styles | Upon the Governor of Ohio a re " e
AMERICAN ANTI-SLAVERY SOCIETY, | provided, tn tue articles of wale of hia promises, thal] —rosewater mirtyrd i eae ety ‘Das seaearusitien fromthe conse a8 : sh f q munfttee,, then
« No. 3 Beckman Street, New York,| board and a room be furnished and appropriated to] What does the T act Society accomplish. by | him of the person of onc nC harged | on the Constitu on 0
the sole use of this Indy, during her natural life; that| means of such ay Strife, illwill, contention, | With stealing five nes
she should have the use of a servant, and be provided | malice avd all uncharitablene during the past spr eae
PENNSYLVANIA ANTISLAVERY Soctery, |Wiuren annuity ol seme to or thre hundred dollars. ee |irere the sonra aah bratty
Fifth St pila This wns all voluntary on the part of the gentleman.| PERJURY AS A QUALIFICATION FOR |*tolen from | oped in com-| put bi
pubiicati Mrs. Maria L. Chil on, the would-be enthusiast WHE PRESIDENCY 0 han abandon man, taking with him| r
ietof th i ‘ ind abolition sympathizer, has indeed most nobly a neg welry and their little child
From The Tolependor 3 eine Taolisbee
AT TWO DOLLARS FER ANNUM, nt h sla mar th
Hyatt
AND AT THY: OFFICE OF THK: IR epee
repaid the noble kindness of Col. Lee. This statem
isn fact, and abundant vouchirs ean be furnished if
necessary. Mrs. Child appears to have taken a very
strong lesson in buncombe from Hon. W. H. Seward
each Insertion. and his like, and has succeeded admirably in bam
‘Tne Constitution of the Unit 2, ? sritk his iparn-| England can ha peoplo.s
provides that before entering secution of | mour. A requisit par ec lad Fe eren s t
his office, the President elect of the United sshall| the’ instanes ‘of Mra. Kennedy, for the arrest sud] erate, Dut the W HH
take the following oath ; Uclivery of Kemedy to the Marshal for a high erime| the masses aed
—— Loozling the learned ones of the Athcus City with hor |." f do solemnly swear that Iwill faithfully execute | against the Inws of Tenne
=e fected sympathy for Ohl Brown: e the office of President of the United States ; and will,| "Mr. Swann proceeded to Columbus, and delivered | to reduce anti-slavery: prin nrnct
Lvo-Slavery, Bring ont the facts, snd show the really conserva-| (0 the best pility, preserve, protect and defend |to Gov. Dennison -the requisition of ( Har Mr. Wrisht resuumat be askine whathar
oe tive people of the North (nnd I know there are many) Bis Renta of te m a : nes en et 1 See Nahin kei time to deliberate, be iving | tut ott sanctions slavery.” Tt is purely ay
he true character a aie ta that clase of mite]. See. dof the same article, defining the duties of the /his answer, and in Init an hour returned to the hotel | tion, and 1 fair onc litera bar
tho true charactor and purpose of that class of mite} b caident, says: “fle aba are that the laws be| and advised Mr. Swann that property in slaves wa : ne aren
rie NatioNat, ASTESLAVERY STANDARD,
h men Redpath are read
— nen Redpath are rea
1n this Department wo give place to such extracts from
ie Proglavers. Press, Nori and South, 04 serve best 1 radical reformers to which Mrs. Child in their favor. I partics, Congress, Le
Musteato the chavacter of Slavery aul the spirit of its] belongs, and hom she is an important and |/eitlfully excented. 7 | not ry by the laws of Ohio, and therefore it] Courts ean be + anction:
champions and apologists shining light Peonsistency, thon arta, jowel.”. | _ One of these Inws is the Fugitive Slnve Inw 5 and if uo erime, by said laws, to steal thom. Mr.| W. did ho
= = Ni cstnader upoe airs cuist| HY case should. arise unc law en wann then proceeded, in comprny with Ken-|t
ANOTHER VILE ABOLITION OUTRAGE. ¢ tloce, to tnke Itall tek; hut it | cutive interferenee, the Pres |nedy,to Cleveland, where Kennedy: and bi mous | bh
wa alely reproduced ae aboeo fa. the New York Journal if Cine | his onth to execute the law , however, | were stopping, and arraigued Kennedy for stealin r c at the |
rapgelteal ce Poors wader the clo} <f) night arise under the whole period of a Presidential | his wife's jewelry. Kennedy was tr a magis-| v i ‘ i wud Mr.
Ix the list of passen r the steamer Ariel, | a°eerth . adwinistration. If su ¢ should arise, a good | trate and held to bail, which he readily gave by « :
which arrived at New York on We y last from s d true man, hating skivery, and believing the Fugi-| siting in the hands of lawyers the money: which | I
Aspinwall, we find the umnes of Mrs. Beverly L tive Slave | be unjust if not unconstitutional, | he bad received for the stolen slave We are glad | clu t
rk, child and intiant THE NEW DEMOCRATIC PLATFORM. | might nevertheless execute it in good faith, rather] to learn that Mrs. Kenned " <- | Constitution int
Mrs, Clark is the widow of our late Minister to — than vaeate an ollie in which he could recommend | session of her child, which she seize t ieile| that the
Guntemaln who-lied in the eapital of that Republi,| ‘Tie following are the resolutions introduced into | and urge the repeal of the Tww, rather than resign the | of Kenned | then t
Mareh 1 te by Mr. Davis, of Mississippi, which have] government into the hands of the Slave Power, or] ‘Thus las been consummated, by
Mrs. Clark took passage in the Ariel, Captain |just passed that body after a long discussion Introduce despotism or anarchy by refusing to execute] Ohio, one of the most atr
Minor, whieh sailed from Aspinwall, April 9th. Resalved, ‘That, in the adoption of the Federal Jaw which he has no power to annul. “But this is lations
iad with her, besides her two little children, a very | Constitution, the States adopting the same acted seve-| quite another thing from volunteering to approve the | betwe« Rae Perpccn Eeceiaea nneseercee | hab (Kes Gensh atcon aballbae Iitgratl
Wad with her, besides her tivo ttle ebildnin, a very aly as fevw and independent sovercigntics, delegating | Fugitive Shave law, and arguing its constitutionality |sion upon the rights of Tennessee which calls for the| Mr. Pierpont said, till toaay-h
raised fn hee fimily, had boon with her during all her [+ postion of their powers to be exercise ly th de {and expediency. ‘the lorner is simply n yielding to | severest remeriial action, in order to obtain“ indem-| for Lincoln and Hamlin, but hu
Silence in Guuteiala, and bad proved herself. aval Government tor the increased security. of euch | the necessity of one's official position smd oath the nity for the past and security for the fnture.” “Iti a] Zhe Tribune, wh
y faithful and devoted servant. om after the | against dan; omestic as well forcien; and |Jatter reveals a disposition to magnify into a virtue} movement of abolitionisin that demands the serutiny an, nud be
Fy ot out. to sea, this Captain Minor sought an that any intermeddling by any one or more States, o| what every good man should shrink from even as «J nud reflection of every citizen of our State. | T f tion and
eee ee Ate Chirk, atl in the most fondly [by acombination of their citizens, with che domestic | necessity." The one shrinks fram doing an act which | dition of fugitives escaping from legal justie
terms desired her to consider hersel veces finstitutions of the others, on any pretext, whether] he disapproves; the other yolunteers to do the same} one State into another, is provided for by the Fe man who held to that
find protection during the voyage, requesting her to political, moral or religious, with the view to their | act because he approves it. A distinction vo obvious |Govermment, avi t as a Republican if suc
Make known to him aay of her wants! nnd assuring | disturbance or subversion, isin violation of the Con-| as this, one would think, must, be recognized among noe of Ohio didate for the I
Nur of lis utmost protection and attentions. By his| stitution, insulting to the States so interfoved with, | tho very “principia” of political efforts. | And yet] power and nullification Mr. Robe
politencss of manner, and kemingly sincere’ profes-| rn tie peace and. tranquillity— who profess to apply the moral lnw to political | dhat must be rebuked and x auet SR oath TERE Tees
sions, he won her confidence to such a degree as to ts for which the Constitution was formed—and by | notion, seem to think that a willingness to perjure| citizen, ‘The Northern States must hurl from power | hoped he would be ¢ a auniwenionvael
eee from, her, in repented conversations, among | hecessary consequence serves to weaken and destroy | oneself by refusing to execute an obnoxious lave after lov nison, and place upon thelr con-|ibring ihe majority up to the Halt ground, and plac
other things, an expression of apprehension about] the Union ving sworn to “take eare that le das befaithtully |duct the seal of their ‘sternest rebuke, or conse-| the government Ne enettnealncerean lence amet
losing her servant in New York, and the ph | 2. Resolved, That negro slavery, ws it exists in fif | executed,” would be th alifiention | quences, fatal ti r existence of the Union,| recommended the meeting to vote th bli
Tid formed to avoid such a serious privation, which | teen States of this Union, composes an important por-| for the Presidency ; ation of power] are inevitable ticket - Tere awe
she intended to adopt upon her arrival in that city. tion of their domestic institutions, inherited from their | transforming the P: Dietator,|
This plan was, to transter herself immediately. to ancestors and existing at the adoption of the Consti-| would be « rightcous act if only done in the name of
! Happily such notions haye as little influ-
passage for her home, in Tennessee. ‘The steward of| important element of the apportionment. ef powers] ence in the sphere of polities as they hnve sanction in .
the Ariel, « colored man, alsa waited upon her. soon | auto ; and that no change of opinion or| that of 1 a
er Ieaying Aspinwall, and desired her perm feelin t of the non-sliveholding States of
StS ee eeritat Bul to’ Ihe ateeneleed (alee [the Union, in relation’ to this institution, enn justify: | = an OL tote forth fully establishes the truth of the eharges|
wd), to which Mis. Clark replied that such a then or their citizens in open and sfstematic attacks —- Cobttinaacdl thes feat ed. before the. Courts of North ul the following resolutio platform
ceremony was unnecessary, as they would certainly | thereon with # view to its overthrow ; and that all Fro Tuo Now York Bsprecs fp ttnargataa thie justice cori thal troalmentye ish
have frequent opportunitics of becoming acquainted | sueb attacks are in manilest violation of the mutual To ees 7 negbivedforsvielnting tha lawa, 5is guilt: was most
on the way and solemn pledges to-protect and detend ench other, Se ae eed Clagelyfarovel ath trial bub kaye pron ae aise to loauee
ME ee eS eel Gru catering aa ouikg | om readers Coop are all ergy andstho®' how lings 9) Riga ensonnble doubt, it/ns been-removed by his | of sarery throogh 1
even the gang-plank was thrown the colored | constitutional compact which formed the Union began—in the regular way—on Tuesday, We retér,] acts and acknowledgments since his departure. He | See\e priocpies the Dee
steward, with the girl, leaped ashore, and disappeared, | re a manifest breach of faith and a violntion of the of ‘egurse, to_the annual ineeting of the American | caus here as an abolition emissary, and the society
ths Teast Mes ae shan infant ge ost colon obligations Intion of the |S iSlavery Society, the main objects of which scem | under whose auspices he was sent selected him for
aud another small child besides, entirely destitute of| 3. Resolved, That the Union of these States rests to be, to come together once a year, to deify Sambo, | the mission on account of his supp
He ee ee eee eee eee ar this equality ‘of taghtal and yxivilegea iauiong its |te-nontbemntize the Church, to execrnte the Union, not | Wark.2> Great leniency: wan mag
t f quali ight privil mnong its] > denounce the Constitution as n J during the trial, anc nalty | {ect all Ue faa
time of n After experieneing all tke inconye-| members, and that it is especially the duty of the thelr natural rhb
hienees of so unexpected 1 loss, she embarked on the | Sennte, which represents the Beatea fu(thein sovoreign | aNd=t.covenant with tho wicked one:? ‘Thesu:fauatios [wiieh its bad. ingutred wis remitted tn conti le nore
Be eee Citta bat Cs nete er eaneerlen, | capacity, fe renee al Alvecopla (a discriiaato, ether | 0° uotscloose: Gotnalas! thelr pn. eae ee eee i re eae tle gaciate| aust betaeraias
Ea Nea ee Ge Pane a at | inpelat tlt; pogo OF, pronertjy m6 hs, Aue Terene- | Heese” olienyy pecullte affinity of the senbanentale aud which he so shamefully dishonored, ‘The punish- | SH 24%
Tah ren hes foure See ot ea lalate the cottek nenscoston ofthe Urated |" People with their own, on the contrary, it ix well | mont prescribed for the offence is imprisonment tor iy of Me end
this 'cily.on Saturday: morul ler Break alin, Ates—to give advantages to the citizens of ox understood that the opinions of the great mass of not less than twelve months, and it is left to the dis:
at the Bollingbrook Tote SSFTINSIAG teat | Seaterehigh aro not equally;ecoured to thowo oF avery [emus comaunlty | ore ndverse, to. the iehueliing Tunes | EMO hela eatenceithe caloni fate
ine Eyucibung whence she wil proceed to"Tennessee, other Sate “be a ea era et esmran ry, alaege many nddqunte uy ang aca fo Ue was
The abave Honlienrs of this How, atrocity oF Cie) 4 Te solve, Thavencither CongressuoK=w TetO- {for eho" purpose ting pratuitous advertisementa# af whom were nonslaveholders, nud=nfter-an able wijeh ins ateay made war countey srepreach During the year-1,600 copies of a letter set
Banish pentlamanselterasatpa 5 reese PSY the widely-circulated mctropolitau journal: en a by two of the first lawyers in the State. The througbeat the civlzed url of ths i f the Society luv beet
senyer 0 nke wEi" Sia Clark: we heard | tbe power toaunel or tupige tue conatuatonal righ [Ot waving, ths movement of the bowlers thes AP] ee oe arto the pusishment, ad the reverend] Wrist stents] distributed, containing the proceeding
m her own lips the nnrrative of the outrag of any citizen of the United States to take bis slave pro een hitherto De ascak 16 look tipen- thésel| incendiary BTS adaTiesclo te cairieenacnt Mtutlon fee Convention, and a lnrge number of the prize
who spoke of it to us in the extremest terms of| perty into th but itis the duty | ¢ at Te with i f P aii lic conteacalia ena rel Deals and th of the Society. Another prize of SLOU hus been off
elt this ease, we, lave ubther illustr ti for otlier pecies Iii eae Lars ear | they were only blowing off a supertluity ve pent] third slayeholder condueted him in satety from the
tate not to say, is, in turpitude and seoundselism, not | judic bavi loca nak possess power iene vequnte|| MEmmatiauils rand tan er ciate aeampea Sent a oye ee ee ae ie |
Se a ee ean ke nate of auton | proteation, we wil then, become the duty of Congress | tho Precursor of th yeasts docilily whieh to fa-| and allies at the No st Subbath fer bis
with the most nbandoned buceancers that ever figured | to supply such deficiency Ave a BatinGs Huse kime the doings ot Una ara Se wens eaten Seon iiaece ale
Bithe Aandi ar ovine Sota g rie 1H entice habitants of an organized | ot the “out-and-outs ” ought not to be underestimated, | pit a hero and a martyr, on the next
Satanic emissaries, “is the sum. of all villunies,"'| Territory of the United States, Silica they; richt fully] woven ve commectad Aa nt Sa) se een et age Paorilty ae Telstar ea) Uae nan OU nei
But in what terms can that system be adequately | form a Constitution to be admitted ns a State into the ea tt etion Wee re eater white ae ons oe a movie see nal ani
described that openly teaches fd practically shows | Union, may then, for the first time—like the people of SA a al se Pasian hacer ade eh Set Hat Di Wocthroe weith C aeons
: Li A MpRe he ren eae | Pratalae beaitacing atin Céumt Cilioa—aeGids (0r|eeeeeee CELT sul, to| statement of Rev. D, Worth, of North Carolina
trines and precepts alike subversive of human and | themselves whether slavery, as «domestic institution, | 1? SET eee parton ctetuiletarithout toueh ———"
Hivine government which ineuleates, ay cardinal shall be maintained or prohibited within their juris eee eet ee arr a ny tse eink
duuies, theft, treason, nud wholesale niurder—a sys-| diction; and if Congress shall admit them as a State] )Snt, ine or ublisantam te Bara e with
tem, in fine, whieh j virtues, depraves the} they shall be received into the Union with oF Wite a reece ne ho Ab itean party tha SL ceobRe
intellect, debauches the hear hhes the conscience, | out slavery, as their Constitution may preseribe nt the | ()." hu aflor lad bar tis aetlow Oe eee ee
unin the malignaat pa I hurl time of thelr admission, ubpagvskaMlaloai iy tse nation ot Heke rane
ty into chaos! 'This is but a faint picture of the| _ 6, Resolved, That the provision of the Constitution | op Leveiay int Congress, and. Old Brows ovine
‘ous aspects of abi Greeley. and for the rendition of fugitives from service or labor, | Uol 0) LaNuioy IM Tatar saan hares
Giddings stripe. It is the wud _periection| "without the adoption of which the Union could not | S10) Sith i SE aS lat, does nat conte
that is deabotical upon carth, the quintessence off have been formed,” and the laws of 1793 and 1850,] Po tee erie and letter of tii Perr aia
Snfernal walienity, suchas envenoms the bosoms and | which were enacted to secure its ekecution, and the | “P f° spirit and letter of their infatuation, } | i
tongues and purposes of the fiends of the bottomless | main features of which being similar, bear the impress == introduce ® measure ni al and extreme than! Mr. 8. 8. Pe id the of anti-slayer in L
mee pup ‘ i ao a eee ee eted be the highest | EXCITING QUESTIONS DISPOSED OF. |has been deemed necessary by any of the leading| destroying each by their division: Tin aebnract
In the lizht of the slave-theft which we have just| judicial authority, have unquestionable claim to the rove The Nocheater Walon end Adrextiver, May 90, und or: of the country, have signally | among the friends Javery is of the
been noticing, we ask the people of the city of New | respect and observance of all who enjoy the benefits] Js ylation to the several memorials and overtures |'0° PT tance, There ou: a platform on which all
York, where it was committed, of what avail are | of our compact of Union ; c nets of State | yy ae "| Se ee tee thePreat aaa a al], 4, diseip h specifically discourages slave-}ean agree, T ought to be v political platform) It v
the conservative meetings, protestations and pledges | Legislatures to defeat the or oullify the] Assombly (Old School), relating to Colonization, ‘Tem- | Hl bids all buying and selling of|on which a Garrisonian can stand, and a Garrisonian | way to]
Which have recently been paraded there, ifso flagitios | requirements of that provision and the law rade in| porance, the Slave ‘lr Ne ker the Committee cecous. | Human beings, aud which systematically inculeates | platform on hich politic c at Hurg
an outrage is not and eannot be punished? Why'| pursuance of it, are hostile in character, subversive | jnended the adoption of the following resolution, viz kind and Christian treatment to slaves wherever neces- | defended at length the Const v Ther
ot the rascals who thus dis; humanity be] of the Constitution, revelu in their effect, and, |” pevcteca, That, wh 2 vie) sarily held, might surely be deemed sufliciently-anti-| instrument, giving 2 histo minis
stand dealt with as they ought to be? Are theif’ persisted in, must, sooner or fater, lend the States ctatm all ight. toh toi on thodder [slavery to satisfy either the dem: of reason or{and detailing the p leya
lition thieves and rufliins forever to rule that| injured by such breach of the compact to exercise | asrt We rigut aod 0 earth ‘ipture The who demand me and who do si ion. [The Chai ited Chr
Is there not spirit cnough in the majority of] their judgment as to the proper mode and measure of Leer atises cate ears bereves prafeute’ jand! at the risk of involving their Church in turmoil and | of Thadd Ily I
ens to seize the wretches and drag them to| sturereated wetlon wf the Avnably fo relercaes to the | danger, may surely be classed among those who arc | strations of up
justice? We leave these questions to the considern- satjects ahava referred to, it I ineapedient to labo ay furter | spoken of by high authority as being “righteous over) Mv. Foster finished, Wi
tion of those in the great emporium who profess to be REV. DANIEL WORTIL ota much. believed that a pa
conservatives and friends of the South, and who, eee This resolution was adopted in a large Committec lacks number
numerically, are yastly superior to the abi foc Prora The Christian (1) Totelligeocer. with but one dissenting voice, and was reported to = = Me. Hen i
Jed on by the Apollyons of the 'r/biine 1 i ree with Uhe Fribune, that wartyrdom| the Convention by the Chairman, Rev. Dr. Scott, of Selections, Messrs. Picrpont an
of the Purit thing, and ought not ta be cheapened. | California, and was adopted by that body with entire
Frou the Soathera (Teno )
‘ome for the North to r
—_—_—_——— er gle took plu
DANIEL WORTH. Asis iearle Coen
cument of Mr nt ina very abl
w The Fe yn manner. At o'clock the mecting adj
some Southern steamer, in which sh taking] tution, by which it is recognized us constituting an | freed
Tue conduct of this deluded fanatic, since his return
er, Chairman of the r
of Jewett
hilt of the
The Commities commence their
Report by saying that the materint resources are not
Ono hundred different meetings held dur
the yenr, und eighty articles 1 for nows
owing the position of the Society
vined Losupport an ageney of
| ar estoy ie ; 1 tent of $900, S418 of which has
{alo Courter. 5 a ego be
Derear of THe Unrnarsts is te M. B. Cos « on, 41 the Iaaentable apath
—By reference to the report of yesterday's 5 a Lio th
ings of the M. E. Conference, it will he seen that a
vote has been taken on the question ug the} The Chairman he attention of th
onstitutional rule of the Church, so ns to make slave x of Rey. Mr. Worth, orth Carc
holding test of membership.” The result, we are} who bad been incarcerated for months in a 5 paper
rvative victory for circulating Helper Ss a pre at] Th
from disruption for at least | political action is necessary to ct the citizens | Chureh
who have endeavored to | from oppression
—_—_—_——— have uo respect for rose-water martyrdom,” says | wnavunity =i =
ont Pe OPE sraarep, [Ur contemporary, to which we say, Amen,, ‘Hence | Tt is a noteworthy fet that so much inflammatory | POLITICAL ANTESLAVERY CONVENTION
MODERN PULLANTUROPY ILLUSTRATED. | oy inability to porcelve nny specinl reasons Tor mak-| matter referred to the Committee on Bills and i
From the Macon (Ga.) Telegraph. {nwa todo over the ease of tho Rey. Daniel Worth, | Overtures, should be thus judiciously disposed of in a
new t
frreutog that a ent, Talat etitlney Go Wen
Tne following has been landed to us for publica-| who seems to have courted persecution, and by his | body rep every State in the whole Confede-|haatar Boston ¢ a response to a eal \be had r
tion, and, if true, which we have no reason to doubt,| foolish bonsting invited Southern attention to his} t#ey: Und the same digereet course beeu pursued by i i sola Mol the Constitution i:
only illustrates what we believe to be anearly universal | incendiary mission. Be this, however, as it all other bodies representing the same constituencies, : t sranen for the smallest homac
fact, to wit, that the whole of abolition fanatics | design in introducing his name in the Jumns is to| the American People would now be one in respect to} j : at Omnig
are ns destitute of the milk of human kindness as | show the fttuity, if not something worse, of the B all the party and religious organizations of the day o'clock 3 ny 2 ‘ ay nanswerabl
they charge the slaveholder to be. Gerrit Smith is| Notion Tract Society. That abolition concern instead of being divided and subdivided upon ques-| persons assembled in Mercantile Hall, pursuant to 0) settl aint
said to be a libe whole-hearted man, and they [loudly boasted it had circulated “ranted for the | tions on which, in the nature of things, a diversity of | call fora new politienl organization against slavery. |
have made him bleed freely; but for the rest of the uthern field nearly twenty dollars’ worth of tra: opinion must prevail. The great en which it is the} J, H, Stephenson called the meeting to order, and
pack, a meanersouled and more brutal crew cannot| Their principal agent was the Rey. Daniel Worth, | Paramount object of religious orgunizations to attain, | read the call [fer which see Staspa
be fond. Lf they were slave-owners, they have indi-] whose letter to the Boston Tract Society we reproduce not be promoted by fomenting divisions upon such | On his ue following officer
cated their record in some of the creatures of their] as an instructive illustration of the manner in which | questions as Temperance, Slavery, &e The dis-)President—Rev. John Pi responded to
own fancy abolition cmissaries contrive to get themselyes into |Cussion of these topics would necessarily produce | mon Stacy Fowler iness Co Was not sent in|
‘And who should be surprised at such n declaration | trouble irritation ; and how irritation, generated by the need: | Foster, J. Redpath, N r ramttroil
charity is a meek, forbearing, forgiving,| “I lasten to answer your inquiries. The" portion | less introduction of extrancous questions among men | Tintot r
ictus, She has no use for maledetions, | of the South in which T Inbor ix wouderfully opened | Who ure united on the fundamental bases of their) On tuking the chair Mr. Picrpont declared that fs ote hey 1 Govern
Sharp's rifles, or Brown's pikes; and your cursing, | for the reception of anti-slavery truth. T ama native | fganization, can be expected fo promote the cause of | had always itical action in reference to | th nuis E i zed Joli
Slaying, abolition bigot is just as fit an exponent of | of this State, and haye faithfully preached av uncom- | Fligion, it were exceedingly difficult to conceive. | slavery, as other reforms. He quote ni
hee spicit us the conquering Moslem was of Chiisti-| promising gospel mt every point of iny work. - Not| Were it Becoming a secular journal, we should con-| ines of his own, composed twenty years ago, 19 illu Wort fle then
anity. ‘The Turk cmbruted himself in the dissemina-| satisfied, however, with mere verbal effort, [ deter-| gratulate the General Assembly and’ the country at) (rate his v He urged el on the men of | jing jail for circulating I that Wha
tion of truth and the Jaw of love, as he understood | mined tointroduce anti-slavery books. Many thought | lnrge, that there is yet one organization whieb ainin- | New Ex tion at the polls South asks 10! netio i
fon eld your finatieal abolitionist. is a veritable | this hazardous in the extreme, in view of the abomi-| tains its. unity, by rigidly adhering to the one cardi-) be let alone. That is just what the di
demon with his philanthropy. Mrs. Child wanted to] nable laws on that subject, snd greatly feared iy | nal idea that called it into exi Jesus of Nazareth. THe proposed to initiate measure
fly to the bedside of the Wounded assassin, Jobu|inthralment. [maintained that he that will not risk | = that sh Jet slavery silone
Brown, in the very spirit of this thlse philanthropy—| something for Christ is not worthy of him; he that From The Joorsal of Coromere, Mr Blanchard, of Boston, announ
not, in truth, to doa work of merey, but to gain the | will save his life shall Tose it, ete; 9 Eprrors: What has become e large |as a ican voter, for he was w
notoriety of identity her name with the Brown raid. | far e “| my expectations. respectable n which formerly wor-| he could from them, but be could see
But when true humanity, nay, the natural promptings | circulated at first rather covertly ? What is the reason | licans fall far short of the work to be done
of parental affection, appealed to her in behalf of a] liking this coyert operation, I came out b nil | was willin; rate with this meeting.
sick daughter, they appealed in vain—because there | daining all concealment, and now my book agencies | that only “a few p come in to supply their| A letter was then read from Mr. Jam
yeas no eclat in nursing wn atilicted child. Mrs. Child | are probably doing more than I have been ablt to do | places ?” declaring that he laid ith in conventions
iWustrates her elnss. by preaching. hese books, I have circulated | Some nd their money, but do not come them-| only in the swe 1 and arrection. He had attended | sentin
“\ Davoutex or Mra Marr L. Comp rs rae] fitty copies of the Crisis’ of the South, by | selves, to show us the light of their countenances, and | but one anti-slavery convention since Inst December, | abolishir
Socrn—How Sue was Treatep.—Whilst travelling | Helper, which takes like Gre in dry stubble. An ex- uge us with their personal as well ns their| and then he saw not the platform for the scaffold of and Rep
throush Pointe Coupee parish,a short time since (says | Governor of North Caroli a popu- | material aid John Brown. He said he was pledged to the work| must_altack
a correspondent of the New Orleans Picayune), I yy, has one of thes a lave-| Where is this congregation? Has it been driven an armed insun nong th Republican
learned of an event connected with old Osawatomic | bolder), and J. A. Gilm this district in J thrown off (to use the language of one of a a tepublicans condemn
Brown which I think should be published,and acconl-| Congress, has another; and now, for all this defiance Jntributors to The Independent) by the too free r I ht that every soap
ingly I zive it, upon the authority of a most estimable | of slavery and slave laws, your humble seryant bas itual Calomel and Jalap " and, but only in the y confine th y «flarts to opposing
lady, and the lovely wife of one of the leading Je-| hardly heard a threat. Is not this wonderful? Is it f so, 1 should advise a change of treatment. I He closed by ust have a political
men of Pointe Coupee not the hand of Him who has said,'The wrath of| would recommend a large dose of Spiritual Ipecacu Lincoln and H:
It is this: that Mrs. Maria L. Child, the would-be | man sball praise him, and the remainder of wrath he | anha, and let it operate, when, where and how it may. | that their sur would benefit the slave
sympathizer and no f the old raseal Brown, had| will restrain?’ Devoutly thankful, I trust, my soul| Perhaps this spiritual ipecacuanba bas already been) Mr. 8. § r declared
a maiden daughter tenehing in the family of Col. Lee, | is to my |, for these signal mercies; and now let | administered in the form of the British Aid Mission, Redpath ald
Of Mississippi, some years ago, who, alter some ten|me say to the American Tract Society, through you, | and we are now witnessing the modus oper di of the man like Lincoln, who declan
years’ residence in the South, became « confirmed | its oflicer, that 1 have no doubt of our ability to dis-| medici to be slavedriver general. There
yivalid, from an allection of the spine. Perfectly | tribute successfully at least 5,000 tracts such as th If £0, it is to be hoped it will either resuscitate between the Ri practical on a
unable’ to assist her swe a|to which you allude. Qur agencies to do this will be|dead body of the “muscular Christianity” of the) Democrats. ald ac ¢ preferre
fnstouer upon the bounty of the gentleman who had | mainly oar anti-slavery preschers, exhorters, cburch-| Trustees and Society, or allow and eause the kernel,” | (Here a large number of persons denied Mr g Il parties,
aenvably asetsted her, she wrote to her mother, request- | members, and many others friendly to human liberty. | the soul, or “spiritual power " to extricate itself from | positions, and he read the fourth resolution of the | ag: f Government in ¢
oe ee furnish her with means, and send ‘or come | Indeed, it is not at all improbable that in a year we the“ busks and cotton bales " of this sublunary Chicago Platform, declaring tha
after and return with her to her home in To| might double the above number. I have just sent to| and fly away “to mansions in the skies, x exclusive right to manage i ic ins
this letter, aud to numerous other letters from the |New York for another box of Mr, Helper’s work to | we at rest nd the wicked tions]
same source, Mrs. Child paid no heed, choosing to| supply the increasing de A slaveholder who | ling.” A Mewpen or 7m Mr. Foster continued, and endeavored to show that] v
falsify all those humane principles that she has pleaded | hay read this book is now asking his neighbors what Asp Dany READER oF the Republiean party has always sustained sla
titu- | attem|
arceration at Way
They expres
uisulted in
ter him their warn
and fire
t dangerous usurp
tof slavery ; ¢
nts fi
ted my
bele
at the
were
nd a Let
writer
ples he has expressed
The letter from Mr. Hyatt c
nthe Sandwich Islands, th
dl his sympath
believed in pra:
Daniel Worth,
the various
He commenced bi
mbodying the princip
bts which white
referred to the
Dr, Cheever r
The slave population were x
+ than their masters (chee
said that much
f a perfect
Southerner from ever
in must first \
Churehes (eheer
mental principle of th
Charles Franci
corresponding interest.
sther Department
sustain
whieh he
held the
praise
in which
unvhe
several
Manchest
ly accept thn
[have
he effec
int
fact that
entlemen,
af tho Executive Ux
ry full public mee
The
The exercises w
Mr. Green, fi
in the Sandwich Islao
i red in the
1 resolution
lopts
n of
the matter wa:
endance
thirty
mornin,
relatiy
ton, were
congratulate
frien
ed to
1d at th
Jefe in
ad
Mr
ampion who, Like
as his
yin that
‘ved by him fr
1 a very long account
tyran
his pri
Hyatt bad be
1 himself detern
nif he had ta
ar round (Inughter
people
number by aid of Law
sOMMMEnL Wik
to brea
pnd ebies
Hyatt ix devoted to the cause
alluded to a
hw has ¢
there the
he
mental in
h
Unlawful
nearly anh
addres:
for t
at hatred of
ith them from a le
well k
ts
ore than he could tell
whieh he
e that
Me
> lon;
Dunn, of the Freewill B;
rker, commencing with
man on his own name, promising to be «
i athi
ympathized with the ]
8 tio, and with
saying he dida’t
He wa
instances
sed wil
lazy Christian who nail
it not preachin
e the uxe
t slaveholders.
ut on his parole of b
for selling 1
© tyrann,
1 of stealing
us finally declared. in
0 administer
could
boy was runnin;
and twenty-Live
walk
for that
of New
r during th
cived with loud and
lading t
na sent at one of t
the truth
lon’
theori
n the slavery que
® slavery extension theory
Benator regarded
great advantag
South,
at the
emancipation move
ribed the repugnanc
carded
Ye
that
men were bi
a sermon from the test,
but time would not allow
ion,
ent.
lashes
said the
arter [licks him
who had been |
d the me
cnuse, nud
which
had for
Inve
tist Societ
einst slay
ay he
that
aged in,
princi:
und pointing to it every
d, said, * O Lord,
as an illustration’ of the kind of prayers th
from the rvatives who
of having a
Dut would not
vane it wa
to the]
rot ont
ty-f
lavery
aud thi
was then intrd
ntinued cheeri
tho Dred &
black
und to respect
upted in an unmannerly way by a person
reporters’ tables
but who was unknown to the reporters present, who
Mv, Cheever repeated
in interrupted,
jjuctions were not made clear, ws
shouted down by the
said he had come
Jeseribed
with whieh &
They
than any
i
prefer to send
green apreading v
yous Upas tre
rsed shield which
J arguments to sho
1 to work with
that a man c
tM and ther
tuken from his,
inl
Lof the slave
hw
ut recent theol
nth side,”
s had be
munication of all pr
and denounced t
jeal conve
was the first duty
ath
tate is to be pr |
thrown into the |
every wont in his much-abu:
Churches of
tis
vill
He
brunch.
cof his remarks t
wil the rx
the honored
e his first
presentatives
dent of
Great
further, that th
should be
He
olutions
Britain
ound thatrighti
OHARLES PRANCIS ADAMS IAS SPOK,
Hist ult
‘on of the
speech in th
the
The Crit
Adaws made hit
thous!
rather the
line instit
blent was s
ed to
n there could
bro
1 by ultras
with
the
atl
uit
for
the
princiy
ht back
s honored practi
right
ided
attendance
puncement of
ich bad bi
ater calamities
led remedy
trated its
and dem
interruption
vated
subject
lories exhibit
rch was a phil
uctive 1m
probilem of thi
id freedom 1
.e from which it had been rudely | ™
n of
tone
cussed.
vr
man ¢
State
The tel
ne speaks of
ity of th
tt decision
men had no
He
hissed and
with the intention of
Fee k
Senator
There was the Jol
¢ height of selfish:
ceded nt the
t they
should have
of}
and instanced the
fet that the price of land in Russia had quadrupled
greater
North, but
ysed to hire them as servants, they reply
would not endure
them’ excep
to
ld
n advanced
nv the
1 the
The conviction
the ministers and
ni
that sluvery was
taken
as Ik cheered
Tle said
put out
vly detensive
uthers
Vin the Declaration of
not limited to
of mankind
mise till
He
ainly ha
made his wark on the I
non to
sud |
ifts, by
lives hu
x of the
at th
Tue
ubmit
Thi
lavehold
with the g
EW
ME A
TH
lay before ¢
Ist of hast uv
to which American public meeting
Ity in keepin,
rel
Whe
ational An
NEW
of this body
yeasion,
1 allow
f exee
for
adver
at th
cellont 60
hed us
For the
this city
themselves h
The Re
dered from coming
mt
the
ms, ME
haye uttered forth
is tho only time
lament the
properly, the lack
His engagements
any other of ott
ening, whi
against
The
l
They
Anti
the
ti-
)
of the
readers to th
Dough
giant of that ilk), the Kev. Me
and N
aud voices W
form of that Conven
in the cause
Dr. Cheever, we reg
by the phy
way through the de
the
ENGLAND CONVENTION
the
Phe
w Melodeon, which repl
nthe si
and with rat
lis capacity is fully ax great as
st balls, ancl it
Phe plan of baving the
pening
up the interest to the last
lutions will well repay an attentive
tovin in ti
avery Movement at
They
»reed, in their different ways and y
tof th
were the
to th
cul impossibilit
pe
© had n
ared wud made
on the
large a
will be
Convention it
spenkers
We
tinity of listening to his powerful rhetoric and |
trust th
it was
which was
fitte
The
been very widely copied by the pr
rs of thi
Thus this
sury in the
en up.
ith, joined to the spells of the mag’
‘orth, cunuot bring buck the reign of Chaos and Old | ¢*slting out
have failed te
the great mas:
It
used to suflice for ten
Movement
d by th
layery
a day
AntiSlayery being
impending
being
f the | truth and fre
Government
pass under
hina
At every hou
that make
n
on th
a favorable
ted
hither again, ghastly or grotesque appari
At
ng:
ions of the
ved
Metuon
ion of the slavery question on the
me day
3 take
tood
ubstit
found a Gt
clo:
oubt that
ended with the most brilliant
fn private entrance
impris
earnestness of appeal to tho reason and the beart
Anti-Slavery platform
ble to be
oted to the memory
r, was one of singular interest,
a
b
y, Phillips, Garrison and Clark
the oces
ch of Mr. Phillips, we see, has |
including the
ity of the lnrgest cireulation, and w
th
extended in all parts of t
ever busy in its works of darkne
nto n normal state
gatherin
Jom.
tary power of
w of the
vlinost of on history we
ve to k
h in the minds, ¢
the | whieh th
thin
the attra
s inevitably a
Lof the country
new chapter
int
in th
131 to
y advisory was also |
of the old
adopt
1
new chapter prop
1
action
s from the Church,
und taken by previous
nid rej
{HS to
journal ¢
An amendm
1
though falling fal
anil leaving, 0s W
of mind within reach of its influences
of the most permanent and beneficent cbaracter. We
antly to repent thateach successive gather-
the most multitudinous and the
st triumphunt that has ever
of
hin,
as much history into one yearns
ving daily more distinet and n
The
Phe
the
AIL their incantation:
Truth and Righte
clouds they
repatra the gollea U
abominations, the public mind is kept in t
Every yenr supplic
«ery of th
rth from the
ain th
rtunity for making ad
‘annity 1
dl
avery Standard. |
aders today the pro
gob,
w yery high],
re held in the
vith which
better pretensi
p
roughly
names of the
had the effvet of filling the
utter that, there is nc
Phis | ¢
flivinl report of the
th and marrow
of
illustrated and
We may
s new speakers, though not 4
Jolinston of Verme
tiully weleomed.
Jd fumiliar names whieh
el of Liberty on the plat-| ssstew of
from year to year
was hin-
opening
of uiaking bis]
Thi
had
wuditory, or, Du
to the platform
mass of the audience
history thut we
But on the se
to pro-
he
‘and
shall often huve an | ¢
anil its proceedin:
doings of the}
much!) iat
Theodore
ches of
were | 24t
subject and thy
largely
Northern coun!
AntiSlwvery
‘This country is livi
influence of the
cuphatically |
most—the iss
wizards of
Uni-| 5, ke
but for
ally, busy in exp
ng it
1 preliminary
interest 0
worlds it
of the
the
n, a reluctant Territory to
, it is the
rehabilitated slave trade
ounter and denl with the
on which draws crowds
How
This latest Conven-
was |onn
Full reports of all these
1 the
pre-| indu
Durbin and laid on the
orted by the majority
Discipline, in the | ju
f exclusion of| whowh
parison |
neral Conferences | to complain? if he, in such case, dey erved the sympathy | objects and resulta of the
y. Ea
| of the leader:
editor of Th
of Dr. Abel
J ep the
Tae Cut
mn the first
if th
of the Ma
Convention
Vice-Pr
shire j
| Boston
month |
Whitney
Barrett, (
kins, And
Islam
b
Phillip
mi we hope will grow into an estab-| 7 Fe
tell P. Garvie
ecifie details a ¢hiO| eae
ubjects and the succession of speakers, we] RIL Ob
introduc
Hallin
Scripture
Wil
and
Whoreas, o¢
coneilable
Valoo 5 and,
Wheres
a coniltlon
lave teal
o th
der, 2
could
be justin
Ds plalatoy
perty tob
4. Kessle
ef) The Conve
| his usual
und detive
it is | This was Mr
lavery
city, wa
character
The ¢
during its
«| expected
andin erit
andidate
leat
A) Br
Adjou
ishops to] ArTERSE
a1 Con-| the President at
| Mr.Gronce W
1} with much expre
Mrs F
r
questi
oo hi
ng of thi
mittee of Arran}
Maine ; Abra
Edmuni
Fall
5 Benjamin
bert 1
sport; Charles 1
ticut
Ganntso
nd the
joune | 4, Resolved,
fa th
"Uhehr w
eure tho p
bat, wea the pe
This meeting was |¢ wth rafus
Union Ite
J the boud
Ive), That (azala to
bla word,apd trust La
the | (uerefoce rms
was of a higl
Rey, J, RAW
formed Presbyterian
ncsigned as the
Tn the abse
ag the next speaker, the pla
a's pre
Ja gen
ny felt fi
to the
n to thi
Padeinen
i
by the similarity of| Though not by any m
the
iety held
it embodies all that v
NEW ENGLAND ANTI-SLAVERY CONVENTION, |
Tux New Esoraxv AxtrStaveny Conve
Jt the
At th
filled a
Mel
1 of 10,
Land State
achusetts
ements
nizati
1
Cha
Jucy Moor
Burleigh, Abby K
Aaron M.
Samuel May
ory remarks relative to the
hich th
cially t
wing B
That swith the aby
ste (hem Ja tho en
eauaot b
the slarel
the prinelples
f gorerameat ems
1th th fo’
titutloa of fread
Letmern F
ted Btatos
1 prtneiples on wh
That shi
tion was first addre
thil and earnest spirit, by Cuanee
Rxsoxp, of Salem
U1. Fonw Di
Jy favorable chara
next called to the
allusion to the
of kind and. respe
and eloqui of the
colored men—Mr,
peech of the mo
nvention, on motion,
e of Rov
by Wexnett PHL.ns,
ent
Mr. Gatrusox referred to the ¢
ence of Jou Brow
] year ago, and the presvuc
‘on our platti
thus made
pontanec
her
—The
nus,
three year
lor which bad come
She was followed by Hexny C. Wrior
hada child under
on: f Northern Ob}
Boston last wee
ton, on Wedn
at which time t
om, Benjamin Chase
ton, Vermont;
Hill; Willian Ashby
sN. Buffon, Lynn
s William Lloyd Gari
Maria W. Chapman, Lydia Mari
N.R. Johnston, Ande
mbted, and refers
ath of
May, 9
elections
from the Bu
station, of m ropr
V plasipla of thele Me
J thote faces, avd with’ trembllo
o tho preacot unbalh
of mank
a
abolition
the rem:
of thi
Finally,
phra:
ret
thei
ould ever
Mav
his
make
it give
of th
Mi
J att
es
duty t
follow
Eve
the Pre
Mr
Marre
impr
y eloquent and e
first
peeeh here, and the impressi
(Coyenanter) Church in that
two preceding speaker:
That the following
hour this Convention
American Chui
AntiSlavery Convention a|
to the Convention,
Pp
d she bad been, not a slave | th
child practise
If my vor
siderat
(Mr. Fo
Jas ho
pract
human s
| slavery w
net
rder by | although pe
Mr
rob, to steal
them that ther
u, in reply, said that the maj
of the people
nan bad a right to the
from the
for aiding
ompelled to
Constitution bad
Wright had
jorsement of Helper’s
To his wind they
it, But he
though he ¢
owed th
dered the present wording would tend to defeat
Wright mi Javeholder had no right to
uch, but
an that thoy
not lik
Wright's re
had no right t
ingly tam
that the slayeholder hits atall, not even
t their masters, with
them, in order to |
said, with mneh
ubje
again returned to slavery ir
ved, thoagh he knew it w
see the Uncon di
brought into bondag
vernment until
to Inbor with th
ject, th
have always | ¢
gh he |
and told them it»
to sympot
radical chang
Mr. Randolph had
and after a fe
he Convent’
The s
istened to wi
lauded, will b
hereafter repor
journed to Thursday
emibled at the Melode
Howann Marcou
t Chueh in Newp
Sawwee May
be ‘present at the
On Mr
tion of the
fed, That th
Asprew T
the slave
Javement taught him by bi
bt in it
jegraded but kn
Sorth would g
Garrisonian pa
| : rae
1 f }q 1 T " 1 ¢
x fl M iL thord R Vhat i i a 5
sn aa nidnigh Syme an 1a \ Our Washington Correspondence,
{ 1 a i} 7 i oto rT i aes:
zs | 1 t
f : ' bes | Mr. ( : apa t f
d { 7 y hot oy th iol ntuck Th iT Jt ld ht y a | i
¢ tho inatit Kentu hem v A bist nant rev i here else, eyually | art
h th yin 't claimed lat sla the ¢ a t I not find Abrali [ iT i}
E poate i
; i 1
ean d
fo Fight r
hi Is} L
| refl n tli
and the | ina fseenieGeetin 4
if 1 now th rou an
So he pt
ns Hie, | us Pe eneeNl Ca 5
thirt 2 ya iT
| ask : mee |
| thank God I fitions ; but th tof | ;
1 | enough lef ak t huvor ri
the 1 he refuses to ob nstituti guide the peopla, but ha| Appl You are not n Your ugh luq'texpect I n ty
r t reaneotmolitienl rites \ | 1 i ht ay said in 739, that 18 property which r : mete
oe your pain If he is not crazy, h 7 be 1 bab 1 tion-block | the law mak n But the Amerieni 1 vi n nth atic, and at
nt on ing. you that, as Abolitionists, un | that is pl ql United | sid, bit too Vurr eid they loresial i. sare 8
I n anything ow tl jessedly | States! 1 trict her | at Ashland (applause), In 1860, Mess 1, fresh from | AeA furor t 7
Win. HS hh less the | ave (clu their i 1 when ag | instinct was not keen enough ; bi tl Vas anting on his tiny Brothers
We hn’ t yet taken t ag olf the lip rth asked the reithent 1, “Tt t do, Billy! Goh to . eens . u ele
I h i tabl vom its own guilt, found nn exey ardoning her,| There is a th of the American nee which | Bits, and th i ends tin
th tanc It ig, n Jon the ground that eh insane! Th m he politician has to rememt I he must so fi. ra eigeaee to Old
centre on the eu r in this country. Nobody ever does an his card here shall not reat upon his 1 ‘ ve Hot endugh to saves th
Nida Lha no ob ” is not insat A voice Tru any thin; rly infamous, tl t th ht and ¢ 1
f Mr. Lincoln ov Mv. Seward c righ pt hi vazy (Jaugh- | Novth cannot defend itself against thi | Do not und n denying that th
| li o ption D tc under
Stephen A. Douglas should L ever whether a father ewns hi here and there among the people saniigl| Psscn tons Dolnpe unites Ice
’ he should, the country will say, “ The North untry; and Mr. Lincoln, who has been | Mrs. Foser—Ia Lincoln eleanor t Ie is not includ
has got th Im, let u th is re t trict, seen the very jail, walk th Mr. Protiar Y he beeau: asm real ty! i u ats
do t Lowe shall have four years of wait on whieh that woman st » the | in Js, that Jobn Brown was “justly hu tte i destonel
p his ind on th ition y tian Republ Jay tu in the seal den | MSs ; Cem esoll th
et of Colunbia—in fnding out a lood i \ ion and Christian A man may be capa | yy Se ee alli jathod cae
ight to be an in 0 ave trade We can appl the sm: i n bul has 1 weady uttered it, if hn Presb 1 Bape Congreg Ln:
into the Presidential ebair, and Mr, Lincoln is an agit Vt n hus not got so low as the stat nof Auburn (laughter | tlds Bhs lor
tor, Mr. Seward agitator Republican i not! I]and applause). I thank God, therefore, that William HL. | tive slave i : 2 Sein Be
can afford t ntiments, toa certain extent. wld make | a good siga. It is a sign that, far off there in tho North- | {ug 1 er of aI
" afford to speak of Knnsas; they can aflord t tis et 1 leaven of that spirit thal th thalisieltar, he. was et from tue Nhat
peak Why, Mr. Hyatt would be a martyr foundation roas a nation, with the right to.tak ts | ul eae = th 7
beeau tint elect sl be 1 the antl-|upon that gibbet of John Brown, not as the scat na ancl r
and it ¢ ith i bad influens nth Hayery mi freed bar fo felon, but the cross of n mart tremendow: > ast . as 1 . .
1 instead of being brutal, would be only the | of Oppr and poli-| A Voicr—Was he nominated beeause he was a better | years ; but turn him into th Het hin
faithful eerva hi thern thermometer ties has g ) of Mr, Lin-| man than Mr. Seward ulphesellisiring jug a
My deduction from this is tantamount ta what I am | coin). Mr, Puins.ty MNOS Seated i 4
cee accustomed to look at the| ‘There ts no politteal he never hind said Aver iL Lto breath
Ave ni the heel an individual | momen There is nom al ley der whether th it n, it t i a k
te mai a not so regard him. | thatentls itself ery William H, Seward’ f Chis i u i von
That political party looks at the statute-book as the best Chureh hh that grea RT yeah eae tonne
k the beat result c je in its knowledge of eth nnd « med here, by hi: 1} 0h n loner
: There i at the ballot-bo cannatexpect| even of tho Whi
|
to th i 1 er hat he ll gr t t must not it Abraham Line e
botter and rage 1. That statute-boi her religiously invermaiernestys
the how: Maps and the In f Aw A, a merely a thing lias struck a hundred (applau: A anil
Ww Gu " Wai v fey 1 of the bos tate-h G nl h f de a
{fal enough to F i | always be a John the Bap ng out in this hhnekst
saaranatl ung! (Loud | (applause). And Iwill tell you wh: Ape
|
fh, to nesort Italian Hberty a Jactity (ls ean honestly say Lof
n When Lh th ko | least desire ( uw bya ning Pp What his r
nation. Le is a i he maj the State | nyth avagant, but he u had or’g -
- i PERT Re TOR right to] or f that cohtea Uniontan , him Special Notice,
hae have a right tology, T wonder an; man retain smumendation
resunasclaiho oul toown applause). As an observer wnt cyt
Cee a eae La Vaal ick | Tr oMe Seem ea ome aa vaN at mac Ki Advertisements,
ft tone of everything like n vital | wh are it has been t mi
a bl im, ut a i ngaged et in the nnd, not peetable denon Hele
contli hi the \ \ i iged te ant! n « h hey hay u mobb h
a fe 2 Prete Me COOK: | olition of slay N Dr aa f
¢ t 1 n A i t, | Cant it here nt to acknowledg: t y 4] Cb + ~ Liza! with Carl
t! q hin li q | that they hay ¥ u the sy he} Bu hE Nightingalopia’ her!
A What freed Ital: y put V s vl don’t ini tou at tl ban pplau ‘now he ny
Gariba The fixet that M ui 1 . : W th : ore ee y hatred
ae SaP DRNERG : m. Whatis Dr. Adams? Am a Senate new Was al 7
aN h insurr V Ema: af, hanging, in the Inte a D, oF 1 1 Bethe TASS re OEE : ng
th nihilated under th the Germa is the Chureh! I'd t tual | aving given up all hop
n nd claim the ind {a b : PACs bs uth it to that a
every peril, under th py thing but a slave in a country like ustic and prolonged cheering
!
her | |
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th
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‘ her abrowd {Must th th enrth|
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adn
——
Foreign Gleanings.